{"id":2096,"date":"2021-05-19T21:46:42","date_gmt":"2021-05-19T21:46:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/s37407.p1377.sites.pressdns.com\/resources\/parents-talk-openly-about-autism\/"},"modified":"2021-05-19T21:46:42","modified_gmt":"2021-05-19T21:46:42","slug":"parents-talk-openly-about-autism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/parents-talk-openly-about-autism\/","title":{"rendered":"Parents Talk Openly About Autism"},"content":{"rendered":"<p> Every child on the <a href=\"\/-p1017-qxid%7C1104061205.html\">autism spectrum<\/a> is unique, with varying degrees of impairments and manifestations of the disorder.&nbsp; Parenting these children, too, brings a wide array of challenges, and also, special gifts. &nbsp;But parents and caregivers of children on the spectrum have some things in common &mdash; a heightened awareness of a human condition, a greater tolerance for diversity of thinking, and a desire for society to gain a better <a href=\"\/-p1017-qxid%7C1103171417.html\">understanding of autism<\/a>. <\/p><p> Here, four parents share their experience in raising such children. <\/p><p> Eve: Mom of Sandra, age 8, PDD-NOS (Pervasive Development Disorder-Not Otherwise Specified) <\/p><p> Gayle: Mom of Leo, age 9, <a href=\"\/special-needs-caregiver-guide-special-needs-p1166.html\">autism<\/a> <\/p><p> Shelly: Mom of Nick, age 11, <a href=\"\/-p1017-qxid%7C1104061205.html\">Asperger&rsquo;s<\/a> <\/p><p> Cornelia: Mom of Lily, age 17, autism <\/p><p> Names have been changed to protect the identities of the children. <\/p><p> <strong><em>When did you notice that something was different about your child?<\/em><\/strong> <\/p><p> <strong>Eve:<\/strong> &nbsp;I didn&rsquo;t. &nbsp;Sandra&rsquo;s my first child, so it was hard to notice. &nbsp;She spoke at 10 months; she was an affectionate baby. &nbsp;She hit all her milestones. &nbsp;There were tantrums, but I thought it was the &lsquo;terrible threes.&rsquo; &nbsp;It was the preschool that suggested I have her evaluated. <\/p><p> <strong>Gayle:<\/strong> &nbsp;Leo is a twin, so I had another child to compare him to. &nbsp;When they were about 8 months old, I began to notice that the quality of his babbling was not the same as his sister&rsquo;s. &nbsp;And there were moments when it was hard to hold his eye gaze.&nbsp; He&rsquo;d look at me and smile, but it would be fleeting. &nbsp;He wasn&rsquo;t inquiring through my face. &nbsp;At 11 months, I read &ldquo;What to Expect Your First Year&rdquo; and realized he wasn&rsquo;t doing what he should be doing by that age. <\/p><p> <strong>Shelly:<\/strong> &nbsp;When Nick was 2, he was incredibly hyper. &nbsp;I&rsquo;d take him to a music class, or the park, and he was the kid who was always running out of the circle. &nbsp;He&rsquo;d be interested in the fan on the ceiling, or the light switch, exploring things other kids weren&rsquo;t into. &nbsp;He was always pointing and talking about things around him, overly curious. &nbsp;But even though he was an early talker, he wasn&rsquo;t talking on point. &nbsp;Getting him dressed was impossible (he had sensory processing disorder), transitions were so hard, and getting him settled was difficult. &nbsp;But he is my first child, and I didn&rsquo;t think anything of it. &nbsp;This was my normal. &nbsp;I just thought I was pathetic. &nbsp;It wasn&rsquo;t until my daughter was born two years later and I began to see how she was physically a different baby. &nbsp;She clung to me like normal babies do; her hands weren&rsquo;t dangly like his had been. <\/p><p> <strong>Cornelia:<\/strong> &nbsp;Lily is a twin, and for the first year, she was the faster developing baby. And then around 12-13 months, the switch happened, though it was very subtle. &nbsp;She had language, but stopped responding to her name. &nbsp;When Lily was two and a half, a friend of ours had seen a documentary on autism and had suspicions. &nbsp;We thought our friend was nuts, but brought our daughter to see a nurse practitioner.&nbsp; By age three and a half, Lily no longer spoke. <\/p><p> <strong><em>Was it difficult to come to a diagnosis?<\/em><\/strong> <\/p><p> <strong>Eve (PDD-NOS):<\/strong> &nbsp;I was trying to diagnose it myself&hellip; was it a processing disorder?&nbsp; Sensory issues? &nbsp;We took her to a neuropsychologist for a full evaluation. &nbsp;It was a 10-hour deal. &nbsp;She was 3 years old when she was diagnosed. <\/p><p> <strong>Gayle (Autism):<\/strong> &nbsp;At about age one, I took Leo to the pediatrician and shared my concerns about his language development. &nbsp;I thought the doctor would poo-poo me and say, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be ridiculous. &nbsp;They&rsquo;re twins, he&rsquo;s a boy, they were preemies.&rdquo; &nbsp;But he asked me very detailed questions &ndash; is he pointing? &nbsp;Is he saying &lsquo;mama&rsquo; and &lsquo;dada&rsquo;?&nbsp; The answers were mostly no. &nbsp;The doctor thought he should be evaluated. &nbsp;In Connecticut, where we live, the state is mandated to assess the child if there is concern, so a program called &lsquo;Birth to Three&rsquo; did evaluations and recommended services. <\/p><p> <strong>Shelly (Asperger&rsquo;s):<\/strong> When Nick was three, he was diagnosed with ADHD, but with a confluence of other issues &ndash; oppositional defiance disorder, sensory processing disorder, OCD. &nbsp;I lived in NYC and it became a full time job for me, talking to all the different people in order to get anything done. &nbsp;I had to find early intervention schools; he had a social evaluation. &nbsp;In first grade, medication was suggested so I broke down and put him on Ritalin. &nbsp;It didn&rsquo;t work and actually made some of his symptoms worse. &nbsp;The psychiatrist said, &ldquo;This means it&rsquo;s not ADHD.&rdquo; &nbsp;In 2<sup>nd<\/sup> grade, a psychologist with expertise in ADHD went to the school and observed him in class and on the playground. &nbsp;He saw that it wasn&rsquo;t ADHD, but rather Asperger&rsquo;s. <\/p><p> <strong>Cornelia (Autism):<\/strong> &nbsp;Lily&rsquo;s initial diagnosis was PDD-NOS, because she didn&rsquo;t have the OCD component. &nbsp;Remember, this was 15 years ago and it was still such a rare disorder at the time. &nbsp;Where we lived, our pediatrician had never treated a child with autism before. &nbsp;Within 5 years after Lily&rsquo;s diagnosis, he had 16 autistic kids in his practice. &nbsp;Subtypes weren&rsquo;t known then and it was very hard to get good information. <\/p><p> <strong><em>How did it feel getting the diagnosis?<\/em><\/strong> <\/p><p> <strong>Eve (PDD-NOS):<\/strong> &nbsp;I was 7-months pregnant with my third child and I was devastated. &nbsp;My husband said to me, &ldquo;She&rsquo;s the same kid she was yesterday.&rdquo; &nbsp;That was so eye opening. &nbsp;I didn&rsquo;t tell a lot of people for a long time. &nbsp;Now, I know I can&rsquo;t change it, so I&rsquo;m more open about it. <\/p><p> <strong>Gayle (Autism):<\/strong> &nbsp;During the evaluations, I was conflicted. &nbsp;I wanted the results immediately, but I didn&rsquo;t want them at all.&nbsp; This has been my own struggle throughout the journey &ndash; the denial as a coping mechanism. &nbsp;There was so much trauma in getting the diagnosis. &nbsp;It happened so fast. &nbsp;One week, I had a hunch, and then two weeks later I had a doctor telling me I have a child on the spectrum. &nbsp;It felt like a rape. &nbsp;I had to constantly remind myself that he was the same child he had been two weeks before. &nbsp;It wasn&rsquo;t a cancer diagnosis (though it felt like that); it wasn&rsquo;t the end of the child I knew, just the lens through which I was now going to see him. <\/p><p> <strong>Shelly (Asperger&rsquo;s):<\/strong> &nbsp;I found myself sobbing in every doctor&rsquo;s chair that I sat in those years. &nbsp;It was very disorienting. &nbsp;I&rsquo;d blame myself, thinking that something I&rsquo;d done is making this happen. &nbsp;Was it something about the birth? &nbsp;When I finally learned it was Asperger&rsquo;s, I felt like things made sense and it became easier to treat him. &nbsp;The treatments were there, and many of them the same from when he was little. &nbsp;But now we were looking at him differently. <\/p><p> <strong>Cornelia (Autism):<\/strong> &nbsp;Thank goodness I had twins, because my typical daughter acted as the &lsquo;control.&rsquo; &nbsp;I knew it wasn&rsquo;t something I had done. &nbsp;I can&rsquo;t imagine what it was like in the 1940&rsquo;s or 50&rsquo;s when experts blamed autism on evil moms. &nbsp;With all the acronyms &ndash; PDD-NOS, OCD &ndash; we joked that it should be WDKS (We Don&rsquo;t Know S&ndash;t). &nbsp;At the time of her diagnosis, the incidence was 1 in 10,000 children. &nbsp;Now it&rsquo;s around 1 in 100. <\/p><p> <strong><em>How has your understanding of it all changed from when your child was first diagnosed?<\/em><\/strong> <\/p><p> <strong>Eve (PDD-NOS):<\/strong> &nbsp;I thought it would get better. &nbsp;I thought she&rsquo;d get some therapy and be fine by the time she was 6. &nbsp;They kept saying &lsquo;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.care.com\/special-needs-early-intervention-p1167-q227941.html\">early intervention<\/a>&lsquo; and we got her that. &nbsp;But as she gets older, the difference between her and her peers is more glaring. &nbsp;I didn&rsquo;t know 5 years ago that there was such a spectrum. &nbsp;Now I can pick these kids out at the mall. <\/p><p> <strong>Gayle (Autism): &nbsp;<\/strong>The only thing I knew at the time was Doug Flutie, the quarterback who had a son with autism. &nbsp;I thought it meant a child doesn&rsquo;t speak, who lacks the ability to receive and display affection. &nbsp;I still feel like I know very little. &nbsp;I can&rsquo;t tell you generalities; I can tell you specifics as it relates to my son. &nbsp;He has learned how to look good in the world, how to try and mold himself into what he&rsquo;s supposed to act like. &nbsp;But at the core, there&rsquo;s a different way of being. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s not other-focused; it&rsquo;s self-focused. &nbsp;It doesn&rsquo;t come naturally for him to be innately motivated toward another person. <\/p><p> <strong>Shelly (Asperger&rsquo;s):<\/strong> &nbsp;When I first heard Asperger&rsquo;s, I didn&rsquo;t know what it was. &nbsp;The doctor had to describe it and recommended a book. &nbsp;All I knew was that it was on the autism spectrum. &nbsp;I went from not knowing anything to becoming quite aware. &nbsp;I know that every kid is different, and every adult is different. &nbsp;I can&rsquo;t look at an adult with Asperger&rsquo;s and say, &ldquo;This is how Nick is going to turn out.&rdquo; <\/p><p> <strong>Cornelia (Autism):<\/strong> &nbsp;Many people have seen <em>Rain Man<\/em> and that is their only perspective of autism. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s a difficult thing to explain. &nbsp;People understand Down&rsquo;s syndrome; it&rsquo;s linear, the kids look alike. &nbsp;Autistic kids are so different. &nbsp;You just have to explain your own kid. &nbsp;Over the years, I&rsquo;ve seen a lot more services become available. &nbsp;There&rsquo;s a much greater network of parents with resources. <\/p><p> <strong><em>What&rsquo;s a typical day like for you, and how is that different from a parent of a &lsquo;typical&rsquo; child?<\/em><\/strong> <\/p><p> <strong>Eve (PDD-NOS):<\/strong> &nbsp;I have to be stricter. &nbsp;Once I say no, I can&rsquo;t change my mind. &nbsp;I have to make a schedule for Sandra and be more rigid about it. &nbsp;There&rsquo;s a lot more to think about &ndash; it could be a full time job. &nbsp;I&rsquo;m always reading up on new <a href=\"https:\/\/www.care.com\/special-needs-autism-treatment-and-therapy-p1167-q227940.html\">autism therapies<\/a>, trying something different like putting her on a program to try new foods.&nbsp; I also have to keep my other two children from not feeling left out. &nbsp;We&rsquo;ve explained it to my younger daughters. &nbsp;Sandra&rsquo;s brain is wired differently and that&rsquo;s why she has a therapist work with her everyday. &nbsp;She has an aide at school because of her autism. &nbsp;She&rsquo;s not a brat when she has a tantrum. &nbsp;But when she has a tantrum, I&rsquo;m supposed to ignore the behavior. &nbsp;So I&rsquo;ll pick up a magazine while she&rsquo;s screaming in my face. &nbsp;Or I try to redirect her. &nbsp;Maybe I&rsquo;ll tickle her or talk about something else.&nbsp; She&rsquo;s unpredictable which gives me incredible anxiety. &nbsp;I&rsquo;ve tried to figure out what precedes the outbursts, but there&rsquo;s no predictability. <\/p><p> <strong>Gayle (Autism): &nbsp;<\/strong>It&rsquo;s depressing. &nbsp;I have to battle those depressing moments constantly and reframe things for myself. &nbsp;Every moment is a moment for social learning. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s always on my mind, &nbsp;I&rsquo;m in constant communication with his therapists. &nbsp;I missed a decade of television and being able to drop him off at birthday parties and leave knowing he wouldn&rsquo;t stick his fingers in the cake. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s a level of vigilance I wouldn&rsquo;t expend on a typical child. &nbsp;I&rsquo;m the CEO of Leo. &nbsp;I can&rsquo;t go to a BBQ and schmooze it up with the girls because I have to watch him out of the corner of my eye. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s like having a toddler in a big boy&rsquo;s body. &nbsp;There&rsquo;s a lot more time spent thinking about the mundane. &nbsp;I still have to pack the metaphorical diaper bag. &nbsp;I have to be so proactive trying to predict what&rsquo;s going to set him off. &nbsp;But I can&rsquo;t save him from the world; I have to prepare him to accept powdered sugar on his pancakes. <\/p><p> <strong>Shelly (Asperger&rsquo;s):<\/strong> &nbsp;Nick&rsquo;s gotten better, but it used to be that just getting him dressed was hell. I&rsquo;d have to wrap my legs around him. &nbsp;He wanders so much. Brushing teeth is so hard; he takes so long to do it. &nbsp;Things take a really long time.&nbsp; When he was younger, just getting him out of the car to go to school without him lying down in the gutter was difficult. &nbsp;He&rsquo;s absentminded. &nbsp;I have to ask him 10 times to get dressed. &nbsp;I have to usher him throughout his day. &nbsp;Breakfast is not so great. &nbsp;He hates juice; he&rsquo;s repulsed by it. &nbsp;His sister teases him and he screams. &nbsp;It goes on every morning. &nbsp;The obsessive-compulsive part of it is intense and it manifests itself differently year to year. &nbsp;Now he talks to himself out loud. &nbsp;The social challenge is huge. &nbsp;As a young kid, they can pass for quirky. &nbsp;As he gets older, these quirks become unnerving to some people. <\/p><p> <strong>Cornelia (Autism):<\/strong> &nbsp;By the time Lily was 4, we had to put high fences around the yard so she wouldn&rsquo;t wander into traffic. &nbsp;We had locks on everything so that she wouldn&rsquo;t pour milk down the sink or punch the wall with knives. &nbsp;At age 10, she turned violent. &nbsp;She had an unknown sinus infection and couldn&rsquo;t express when she hurt. &nbsp;So she demonstrated it physically. &nbsp;She had me in a headlock in the middle of the night once when she had gotten her period and had cramps. &nbsp;The self-injurious behavior was so bad that we&rsquo;d have to cushion her head and hold her down until the Advil kicked in. &nbsp;Part of her doesn&rsquo;t work. &nbsp;She knows 10 signs (of sign language) but can&rsquo;t indicate when she needs to use the bathroom. &nbsp;There are mornings when I wonder if in my past life, I was the person who shot Gandhi. <\/p><p> <strong><em>What would you like the world to know about autism?<\/em><\/strong> <\/p><p> <strong>Eve (PDD-NOS):<\/strong> &nbsp;There&rsquo;s a misconception that these kids are brats. &nbsp;I get funny looks in public until I let people know she has autism. &nbsp;I want people, when they see a child acting up, to stop making an assumption that he or she is misbehaved or the parents are bad parents. &nbsp;I want the world to know that this sucks. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s exhausting and frustrating. &nbsp;I know my daughter is in there. <\/p><p> <strong>Gayle (Autism):<\/strong> &nbsp;I think we all need to work harder about pushing the outer limits of what we view as acceptable and normal.&nbsp; We need to push our comfort level out a bit to include people who fall out of the norm. &nbsp;Our definition of &lsquo;valuable&rsquo; needs to be expanded. &nbsp;It seems that the initial take on the world is how to exclude v. include. I&rsquo;d like to create some receptive community &ndash; how do we teach kids that we&rsquo;re all different and it&rsquo;s important to understand what makes us who we are to each other.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s funny; my daughter knows that Leo has autism. &nbsp;The more we tell her about it, the more empathy she is forming. &nbsp;And the less tension and anxiety there is in our house. <\/p><p> <strong>Shelly (Asperger&rsquo;s):<\/strong> &nbsp;When you get to know my son, or any person with this neurological makeup, he is a good person. &nbsp;It&rsquo;s very hard for him to lie or fake things. He doesn&rsquo;t know how to do that. &nbsp;He may act out in frustration, but there&rsquo;s not a malicious bone in his body. &nbsp;He&rsquo;s incredibly funny and loving. &nbsp;If he gets a book on science or Egypt, he&rsquo;ll kiss it. &nbsp;He&rsquo;s 11 years old, but we still cuddle all the time. &nbsp;I wish people could look behind the diagnosis or label and see the child. &nbsp;There can be a lot to celebrate, even though it&rsquo;s really hard. <\/p><p> <strong>Cornelia (Autism): <\/strong>&nbsp;I think there&rsquo;s still an air &ndash; much less now than decades ago, thankfully &ndash; that somehow this is the parents&rsquo; fault, specifically mothers. &nbsp;My father believed that. &nbsp;He didn&rsquo;t speak to me for 10 years because he thought I did this to my daughter. &nbsp;My grandmother actually suggested shock therapy to snap Lily out of it.&nbsp; 30 years ago, we caused it. &nbsp;Now we&rsquo;re to blame if we don&rsquo;t work 13 hours a day to cure it. &nbsp;The sentiment is out there. &nbsp;The guilt component can get you if you let it, but you have to talk to other parents to find the support. &nbsp;Thank God for the Internet. &nbsp;To have online communities to access fellow parents changes everything. &nbsp;Also, I know school districts are strapped. &nbsp;But cutting <a href=\"https:\/\/www.care.com\/special-needs-special-education-p1167-q227942.html\">special education<\/a> is such a mistake. The effort you put into these kids as children could make or break whether they end up in full-time care as adults. &nbsp;And that costs a lot more. <\/p><ul><li>Talk to real parents in our <a href=\"https:\/\/www.care.com\/group\/specialneedschildren\">Special Needs Support Group<\/a> (log in required)<\/li><\/ul>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Every child on the autism spectrum is unique, with varying degrees of impairments and manifestations of the disorder.&nbsp; Parenting these children, too, brings a wide array of challenges, and also, special gifts. &nbsp;But parents and caregivers of children on the spectrum have some things in common &#8212; a heightened awareness of a human condition, a <a class=\"more-link\" href=\"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/parents-talk-openly-about-autism\/\">Read more&#8230;<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":875,"featured_media":11968,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"enable_toc":false,"care_reviewed_by":0,"care_post_updated_flag":false,"care_updated_date":"","last_update":"2021-05-19","view_count":11007,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"member-type":[3],"vertical":[6,17],"platform":[2],"class_list":["post-2096","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized","member-type-seeker","vertical-children","vertical-child-care-advice","platform-resources"],"acf":[],"created":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2096","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/875"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2096"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2096\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/11968"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2096"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2096"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2096"},{"taxonomy":"member-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/member-type?post=2096"},{"taxonomy":"vertical","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/vertical?post=2096"},{"taxonomy":"platform","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.care.com\/c\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/platform?post=2096"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}